Ankara mayor to US: deliver Gulen

'US must deliver Gulen to remove suspicion of Washington's involvement in failed coup attempt' Ankara mayor says

Mayor of Ankara Melih Gokcek. PHOTO: AFP

ANKARA:
The United States must extradite Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen to Turkey to remove any suspicion that Washington was involved in the failed July 15 coup, the mayor of Ankara Melih Gokcek said.

Gokcek, mayor for over 22 years and one of the most senior figures in the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, also told AFP in an interview he feared Turkey was entering a period where top officials could be at risk of assassination.

Turkey wants Pakistan, other 'friendly countries' to help against Gulen

Turkey has squarely blamed Gulen for masterminding the rebellion, saying he assiduously built up a "parallel state" with followers in all institutions. From his secluded compound in Pennsylvania, the preacher has denied the charges.

Turkish authorities have launched a sweeping nationwide purge of suspected Gulen supporters since the coup, dismissing more than 50,000 people from their jobs and detaining more than 18,000.

With some officials now even alleging that Washington could have had a hand in the putsch, Ankara wants the United States to send back Gulen to face trial in the country he left in 1999.

"For America to prove it is not behind the coup, there is only one thing to do, deliver (him) to Turkey," Gokcek told AFP in the capital.

He claimed that the US had already given "signals" it was involved in the coup after a top American general expressed concern that many of Washington's former Turkish military interlocutors were now in jail.

"How will it be known whether America is or is not involved in this business? If they deliver (Gulen) there is no problem. But if they don't the United States will not escape from the dock."

Gokcek, who had previously suggested Gulen was hypnotising people, expressed bewilderment that Washington had tolerated the cleric's presence and allowed his foundations to open up schools in the US.

Turkey wants Pakistan, other 'friendly countries' to help against Gulen

"For America to tolerate this, it seems there are connections to FETO," he said, referring to what Turkey calls the Fethullah Terror Organisation (FETO).


The US State Department has rejected suggestions it had any hand in the coup as "ludicrous".

Gokcek said Gulen's role in Turkey went back to the premierships of Bulent Ecevit in the 1970s and admitted the AKP had mistakenly formed an alliance with his similarly Islamic-leaning supporters when it first came to power in 2002.

"But their biggest aim was to use us and to get their own people inside the army," he said.

Gokcek, one of the most outspoken senior figures in the AKP who regularly updates 3.4 million followers on Twitter with his views, said there would no longer be a risk of coups in Turkey but rather of assassinations.

"Politicians will be at risk of assassinations... of course I have increased my security," he said.

The mayor was quick to take to Twitter on the night of the turbulence, describing it as a Gulen-backed coup minutes after the first reports emerged and then calling all supporters out into the streets.

Turkey detains Gulen's nephew after coup attempt

He claims to have been number six on a hit list -- topped by Erdogan -- to be killed by Gulen followers after the power grab.

Gokcek said he was "absolutely in favour" of the death penalty for the coup plotters and brushed off warnings from the European Union that reinstating capital punishment could end Turkey's decades-long bid to join the bloc.

If Turkey is told it can't enter the EU, "well I swear to God, we don't care. Let us not enter," said Gokcek, adding that he had been a champion of EU integration in the past.

"When we were close, you were far away. Europe is not the only place in the world... We will find others."

He said if parliament passed a law reversing the 2004 death penalty abolition, it should then be put to a referendum.

"The world can then see if the people want it or not."
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